Saturday, August 24, 2013

Welcome to High School Fall Softball

Thursday was our first game of the season! It was a JV double header, but since our team is slightly smaller than last year, the coaches decided to let everyone but the seniors come. We had 17 girls and we split into two teams, one for each game. Our opponent was Platteview High School, and this is the first year that they have had a High School Fall Softball team. They didn't want to bite off more than they could chew, so they only wanted to play our JV team. They made a big deal about this game. They had a pep band which never happens at a softball game, the mayor of Springfield gave a speech, the school board president gave a speech, they had an announcer announce all of our names (they actually pronounced my name right!), and they had two people throw the honorary first pitches on the new field. Those poor people had no idea what was in store for them.

The first game went on forever. I did not start the first game, I was assigned to the second game. During the second inning alone, we scored about 15 points, which is A LOT for an inning. In the third inning, my coach was coaching third base (the opposite side of the field from our dug out), and he yelled across the field, "OG! Go get warmed up!" I rolled my eyes as I grabbed my glove and visor. My coach likes to creates nicknames, and mine is OG. This started this summer during conditioning. I turned most of my Ogallala t-shirts into cut offs, and I wore them this summer at conditioning, so he started calling me Ogallala. After a few days he decided that Ogallala was too long, so he started calling me OG. He put me in left field, and it was a three-up three-down inning, and the game was over. We won 19-3.

I started the next game in center field. We I was up to bat, I hit a ball in the gap between second base and center field. They tired to throw me out at one, but it was an over throw, so as I rounded first, coach was yelling, "OG! JimmyJohn! JimmyJohn! Get down on three!" This was not the call I was expecting. JimmyJohn means running first to third with out stopping at all or looking at the ball. We usually use this play with our super fast runners who can slide well, not throwers who just plop on the base without sliding properly. But I did it anyway, and surprisingly, I beat the throw to third, so technically, I hit a triple. The next girl up hit a single, and I was able to score. The next time I was up, I was walked to first, and then stole my way around to third. The next girl up was a freshman, and she had a beautiful hit down the third base line, the only problem was, it drilled me in the ankle. I instantly brought my knee up to my chest and clutched my leg. Through tears I looked down and saw that I was in fair territory. Crap. I was called out, and the freshman was given first base. I was scared to let my foot touch the ground; I seriously was about to hop back to the dug out. I slowly dropped my leg and let it touch the ground. The second that I put weight on it, I fell. The first thing that popped into my head after I fell was "Crap, I'm not going to be able to perform at Fall Kickoff with the Dance Team". I got up, and gimped back to the dug out, and after walking on it for the rest of the inning, I was able to go back into the game. I was so angry at myself because the coaches have told us so many times that when we are on third, we need to do our lead off in foul territory. I did, but I wasn't watching the ball when I started running, I just listened for the CRACK sound of contact, so when I started running towards home, I drifted into fair territory, and then when I realized that it was coming straight for me, I tried to jump, but it was too late. Had I been in foul territory, I would not have been called out, and I would have scored. When I got back to the dug out, my coach said, "Stofer, I have a new nickname for you, OG just isn't working for me." I laughed, "Alright was bizarre name could you possibly have come up with this time?" I was a little surprised at his answer, "Big O!" So now, when ever I do something well, he yells, "Atta Girl, Big O! Big O!" (He holds on to the "Ohhhhh" forever. It is annoying.)

We ended up winning that game 16-3. I feel bad for Platteview, they had no idea what was coming. Fall softball so different than Spring ball and traveling teams, and that is what those girls were used to. Welcome to High School Fall Softball, Platteview High School. Enjoy the ride!

P.S. I will be able to perform at Fall Kick-Off, and I have a an awesome bruise! All of us girls on the softball team compare our bruises, and currently mine is the best! :)

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

'Tis the Season!

Fall softball season started on Monday, and I am very excited! The first day of practice was kind of difficult, but it always is. It's weird how much you fall out of routine if you haven't done something in awhile. The last time I had played softball before Monday was the week before All State Camp. It was strange. Routine push-threw ground balls were catching me off balance and ill prepared. I forgot all of the little things such as don't turn and burn with your glove in the air, don't say "no cut" if you don't need a cut, 30 means 30... RED LIGHT. These small things that I have been yelled at for biffing up numerous times completely slipped my mind the first day. Thankfully, I was not the only one who let all of these minor yet important details slip my mind. The second practice was definitely better. The general team attitude was a lot lighter, and the coaches didn't have to yell as much. Although, my coaches yell A LOT... and cuss, they like to do that too. Anyway, we were doing an outfield fly ball drill, and I was running after a ball that was soaring high above left field. I didn't think I was going to be able to catch it in the air to get the out, but I kept running anyway. I looked up and noticed that it was starting to drop at a weird angle, so I jumped up in the air to get. I successfully caught it, and in the process fell to the ground. As I stood up the whole team was laughing at me. I asked, "What's so funny?" with a confused expression. As I returned to the line, my friend Shae finally stopped laughing and told me what happened, "It was just so funny because we can totally tell that you are on dance team because you did a perfect leap when you caught the ball. Your back leg was so straight and stiff, and your jump was graceful." This made me start laughing because just last week in Dance Team Practice we took 45 minutes of our time just working on leap technique. I could do a leap in my sleep. (Ha! That rhymes!) Today at practice, I got a home run off of a bunt, which should never EVER happen. (For those of you who don't know, a bunt is when you hit the ball straight to the ground in front of you. A bunt doesn't go more than a few feet in front of home plate.) Anyway, the coaches were pissed. "You just let Annastazia Stofer score a home run off of a bunt! Annastazia Stofer! No offense Annastazia... But seriously girls! She isn't fast at all and you let her score a home run off of a (bleep) bunt!" That ended poorly for the girls that were playing defense, but all the girls on offense were laughing.

Today I marched in the Otoe County Fair Parade. Holy crap. People need to learn how to march, count, and when to chair step. It was terrible. I feel really sorry for Mr. Parde, he is trying so hard, and people aren't working hard in return. That's all I'm going to say about that. After we were done marching, I had to run back to the start of the parade to get in the back of the "Dance Team Truck" and throw candy at small children. It was so much fun, and it is so cool to see how much the little girls look up to us. There was this adorable little girl with poms-poms who came up and hugged my leg! She was adorable, and she had cute curly, bleach blonde hair!

With the start of softball season also comes the start of school. Tomorrow is the first day, and I am actually excited to back into a normal routine. As for homework and studying... not so much.

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Be Thou My Vision

I've probably mentioned this before, but Be Thou My Vision is by far my favorite hymn. (The old version, not the up beat new version with the different melody...). We sang it today in church, and it was wonderful because the orchestra is back from their "summer break". It was also amazing because Mr. Boehr was leading worship, and not the new young guy. Mr. Boehr is so awesome, he is so smart and he is so dedicated to the Lord. I noticed something about the orchestra today that I don't think I have noticed before. If you have ever watched someone play violin, you will notice that they usually lean or rock back and forth a lot. Well today during the big crescendo came during Be Thou My Vision, the entire violin section leaned at the same time, some of them were practically falling out of their chairs. I don't know why I found this so funny, I mean, I'm sure it happens with other orchestras. I want to join orchestra so bad, but I really don't think that I am good enough. All of the instruments either have microphones attached to them, or attached to their stands. That means no wrong notes, that also means that if I randomly stop playing they are going to turn my mic up which means my playing will be exposed even more. One of the oboe players broke her wrist or arm or finger or some sort of arm part last year, which opened up a spot, but I was too scared to try to take her place. This morning we also sang What a Savior by Laura Story. My friend Kaylee was standing next to me, she poked me and said, "It's your solo!". During the chorus Kaylee  and Lauren sang their respective Soprano 2 part, and I sang the Alto part. It wasn't the same as singing it in Girls Choir, but it was still good.

This evening I went to Nicole's wedding. Nicole is Kara's older sister, and she is my adopted older sister. She has been my role model since Kara and I became friends in like first grade. She is beautiful on the inside and out, and she loves the Lord. Nicole used to be our Nanny, so after spending entire summers with her, we became very close. (She could tell you numerous horror stories about babysitting us; we were very naughty children. One time we locked her out of the house for about half an hour. Let's just say I had trouble sitting down for a couple of days after the spanking we got from Dad that night. Ouch. It hurts just thinking about it.) It was weird to see her standing up there with her new husband. To me, she always be teenager-Nicole, not newly married Nicole. She was a major factor in my choice to become a Nurse. She will graduate from Creighton University School of Nursing this year. It's just strange to think that just a few years ago she was driving us to the pool, making us lunch, making sure we didn't kill each other, making sure we got our chores done, cleaning up our scrapes, cuts, and other "owies", and now she has to babysit her husband. Time has flown by. Nicole will always be like my older sister, and I can't wait to witness her pursue her walk by faith with her new husband.

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Official... I guess?

This week I have been helping out with Jr. High Band Camp, and upon my arrival at home after band camp on Monday, my Momma had some pretty exciting news. The sale of our house has been finalized, the closing day is September 12th! We set the closing day for the house in Unadilla for September 12th as well. Mom also said that on September 12th we will leave for school from our house here, but when we go home we will go home to the house in Unadilla. I am excited, but I am worried about moving during the school year. The first time I moved, I had two weeks to get my room organized before school, the second time I had an entire summer, and now I will only have a few hours when I get home (after school and softball practice). I have not actually seen the inside of this house, so I am a little curious as to what it is like. Momma told me that my room is the smallest because they had to give Rudy the biggest room because he is going to have to get a super long bed because he is going to be so flipping tall. Today when we were shopping Mom and I were talking about my room colors and decorations and such. I'm not a fan of a lot of decorative items, I think they just make rooms look cluttered. I am a big fan of simplicity. Momma and I decided that my colors are going to be yellow and grey. Ideas were flowing through both of our heads about verses that can be put on the walls and a hamper to match my blanket and an antique desk that we are going to paint and use and such. But then I pointed out that I would be moving out in two years anyway, so why put so much effort in to it. This created a dreary awkward silence, but then Momma said that it would be worth it even for the short amount of time.

I am very excited for our new house, except for one thing... it is in town. We are NOT town people. We yell, we fight, we walk around in minimal clothing, we are obnoxious, we are messy, we are Stofers! It will be interesting to see how this all works out. I can guarantee that the cops will be called at some point. Our neighbors are going to hate us. There is a reason that we live at least a mile from all possible neighbors and surround our house with a tree line. Also, the house only has a two car garage... that won't work with our 5 and 1/2 vehicles. (Rudy's pick-up currently is not able to be driven yet, so I only count that as half of a vehicle. It's so funny to watch him try to work on that thing. Last week he was out there almost the entire day just cleaning up rat poop and removing some gas tanky thingy. That thing seems to complicated to actually fix.) It's not going to be an easy adjustment, but I am excited that I will only have to drive 5 miles to school! That cuts off at least 30 minutes of driving time per day. It will be wonderful, and maybe then my parents will stop nagging me about my gas bill. Some kids fear the day when their phone bill comes in the mail... I, on the other hand, fear the day when my gas bill comes in the mail. It usually ends in catastrophe, and by catastrophe, I mean a lot of chores. On the bright side, school starts this week! Only two more years!

Monday, August 5, 2013

Defying Social Standards

I have been thinking a lot about stereotypes, defying social standards, and social status lately. If you haven't noticed, I am not a stereotypical teenage girl. I don't drink, smoke, or do drugs. I do not tan into a perfect golden brown color in the summer. I enjoy going to church to learn more about my Lord and Savoir. I have straight A's, and it will stay that way all through High School and College. I desire to serve people, which is why I want to become a Nurse. I am not stick thin, nor will I ever be. I don't go to wild parties, in fact the parties I do go to can't even be called parties, they are "Nerd Gatherings". My hair will never be perfectly straight; I will always wake up in the morning with an Afro. I despise school dances, yet force myself to go to them anyway. I am respectful to my peers, teachers, and other such elders. I do not date, and I am not on a man hunt. I would rather write in my journal or read a sappy romance novel then talk on the phone or waste time on the computer. I do not strive for popularity, first of all it is stupid to set your mind to something like that, second of all I am pretty sure popularity is unreachable for me. I say stupid things, and my mouth usually speaks before my brain can process whether I should say it or not. I am in LOVE with Math and English. I flea from any potential drama. I love singing and dancing, but when those two actions are combined, it usually ends in some sort of catastrophe. I love to use large words, and it makes me even more happy when I have to explain what said words mean to other people. Country music puts me to sleep every night, and every night before I go to bed, I sing my All-State scales and arpeggios. I guess what I am trying to say is... I'm not a normal high school aged girl, and I feel like there is always a lot of peer pressure to conform to social standards, but I don't want to. I don't want to become a typical, robotic, snotty, drama-infested girl. I have watched far too many girls fall into the social standards, it really makes me sad.

I guess the main reason I have been thinking a lot about this stuff is because this year I am defying social standards in many ways. This year I am going to be on Dance Team, usually only popular people are on Dance Team. I am not in any way, shape, or form popular, and I don't want to be. I also made Student Council, which is a total popularity contest. I am just a little nervous about this year. Everyone always says that Junior year is the hardest. I believe it. This year my math class, College Algebra, counts as college credit. If I screw that up, I am already hindering my chances of being successful in college. I also opted to take the hardest science class available for Juniors... Chemistry. I am not very good at anything science related except for human anatomy type stuff. In fact, I died a little inside when I found out that I will have to take Chemistry in college to become a nurse. It's not going to be easy. I am also worried  about my ACT. My parents have made it very clear that they have no intention of paying my way through college, so I need to have a good ACT score as well as my 4.0 GPA. I told myself that I was going to take it blindly the first time and not study at all, but I have changed my mind. I have been taking practice tests and studying like crazy. I have been praying a lot about all of this, but especially upholding my testimony through all of this. This year will definitely be a test of faith. I really need to stop worrying. The Lord's will will be done. I just need to pursue my walk by faith.

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Unsightly Photos... Level: Stofer

So my mother was going through some rather recent photos, and she pointed out all of the ones that I look yucky or stupid in... there were a lot of them. Normal people would be embarrassed, but I'm not normal and neither is my family.
 
This is probably my favorite. Ahh Christmas card pictures... You see, we never actually send out Christmas Cards. Mom always forgets, and by the time she remembers it is too late. One of these years we will actually get them sent, hopefully before I graduate. Anyway, we go through the same routine every freaking time we take a sibling picture. No one can hold still. Someone is always blinking. The cat/dog/rabbit intrudes. (You can't see him, but our little rabbit Haas was hopping around on the floor in front of us. He was wearing his pink harness, and we felt that he was important enough to be in our sibling picture.) Mom has the camera messed up. Mom can't get the right angle. We are laughing at someone's bodily function whether it be a fart, burp, sneeze, or any combination of the three. And in this case especially, we make funny faces at Mom to piss her off because we are tired of sitting there. There is a quite hilarious story behind the conversation that went on right before this picture was taken, but all four of us have sworn to secrecy. Just know that it is quite embarrassing.

This is the "Like Father Like Daughter" picture. You see I am always VERY tired on Sunday afternoons. It just seems like a perfect nap time. On this particular Sunday afternoon, I was supposed to be folding clothes, and Dad was supposed to be working on his little fire report thingy, but as you can see, neither of those things are getting done. Why? Because we Stofers can fall asleep any time in any place. Some people think it's weird, but I think it's a gift. (Except for when you fall asleep some place silly like on a cement pad in front of a barn or on the deck because in those instances, you get really bad sunburns... Yes, I know this from experience.) Notice that we were both too lazy to even change out of our church clothes. 

This one was taken a few weeks after Dad moved back to our Eastern Nebraska house to work on the Omaha Fire Department again. Mom and the four of us were still living in Ogallala to finish up the school year. We went out to eat, and Mom said "Kids, scrunch together so I can take a nice picture and send it to your father." Yup, this our idea of a nice picture. It's too bad that the camera cut off Rudy's face in this picture. That was quite the sight. Notice my Grandpa in the background trying to grab his stuff and get out of there before people thought that he was related to us. Not really, but that's what I would do.

"Annastazia and Rudy! Look over here so I can take your picture!" "No, Mom, you have taken enough pictures." 3 minutes later... "Mom you have taken at least 20 pictures can we be done yet?" "Alright now you've done it. You've pissed me off. I'm deleting all of them, and after that I'm only going to take one picture, so you had better make it good." This is what we chose to look like in said final picture. I was laughing so hard that I was almost crying. In our defense, we had just gotten done with 20 minutes worth of family Easter photos, and that was a long and irritating experience for all of us, including those of us who did not get breakfast and were eagerly awaiting Easter Lunch. For some reason my family is incapable of taking decent pictures. Now I realized that the majority of this problem could be fixed by the four of us being more patient and understanding, but Mom is such a difficult person to deal with when she is behind a camera. It's a very good thing that she is a pharmacist and not a photographer. Holy cow. That would be bad. I could go on and on with unsightly Stofer pictures, but I will save you the anguish.

Monday, July 29, 2013

Band Camp Day 1: Danielle!

I could not sleep last night, I had far too many things on my mind. Things that shouldn't keep me awake at night, things that are completely out of my control. So it was no surprise that I slept through all 10 of my alarms. (They start at 5:30 and go off every five minutes until the time that I need to get up, which is 6:15.) My Momma came in my room right before she left for work and kindly said, "It's 6:30! Get your lazy butt out of bed or you are going to be late for softball!" I was so tired. Thankfully I didn't have to do much to get ready, and I was out of the house by 6:41. (Not a record, but pretty close.) For softball conditioning we did all kinds of sprints and agility exercises in the gym because it was raining outside. (I voted for running in the rain, but some girls where complaining about how they might mess up their hair or smear their make-up. Puh-lease. It is conditioning, not a flipping fashion show.) After conditioning, we went into the weight room, and us band people did a shortened workout so that we could get out of there in time for band camp at 9.

As I walked into the band room, I was quite disappointed. It already smelled like BO. Yuck. We started with sectionals. Sectionals really make me mad. Flutes go with the clarinets, but the clarinet section leaders just mess around the entire time. They won't even count off or clap off, which irritates me to no end. There are only two flutes this year, and my flute-mate was at a volleyball camp. So just like all of our July rehearsals, I took over the little sectional shin-dig. I was in the middle of a 12 count count-off when the door opened and Danielle came in! Danielle graduated this year, and she is amazing! Everyone always says that I am the blonde version of her. Anyway, we are great friends, and I was so happy to see her. I kept counting off as she walked by, and she petted the top of my head and said, "That's my girl!". She was definitely the senior that I looked up to the most last year. We spent sooo many hours together practicing choir music and preparing for All State. We even had an "Alto 2 females who are trying out for All-State" cookie stash in the desk in Poe's old office. Ms. Poe would let us go in there during class and practice All-State stuff because she knew that we knew our regular choir music well enough. She was our choir president this year, so she gave a speech at the end of the year music banquet. The way she gave her speech was pretty neat. The basic idea of it was to show how much we procrastinate, but it also recapped the entire year. I enjoyed it. Anyway, after the speech she came up to me and hugged me and said, "I wanted so much to include in my speech that the only reason the four of us made All-State was because of you, but I figured that would look kind of bad because you didn't make it." I laughed and then we were both sobbing. We both cried a lot throughout the year.

After sectionals we had lunch and then did circuits. I love doing circuits! It's so much fun to teach all of the little freshman all of the commands and calls and fundamentals and such. After that we ventured out into the rain to do more fundamental stuff. I had a pretty decent conversation with John about recent problems and such on the way down to the field. After field fundamentals we ventured into parade marching. We were practicing our ending chair step on the cement, which was quite difficult because the road was covered in water. After that we marched back to the field to do our drill down. I was doing quite well until Mr. Parde threw in the delayed "hut" after "Right Flank". It get's me every time. I didn't leave school until around 3:15, and frankly, I was ready to get out of there.

After supper, I discovered something not so good. I have Pink Eye. Yucky. It is a very uncomfortable feeling, it's disgusting. I hope the eye drops make it better soon. Looks like I will be wearing my "bug eye" glasses for a while. Wonderful.

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Moving On, Not Letting Go

My grandparents took their house off of the market, they were not pleased with their real estate agent, and were getting frustrated. But last week they got a call from the real estate agent that they had fired. He said that he had a couple that was  really interested in their house and wanted to know if he could show it. They said yes, and after two showings, this couple made an offer on the house, and on Friday my grandparents and this couple came to an agreement. So that's it. The house is sold. The closing date is sometime in mid-October. We were on our way to the bridal shower of a girl who used to be our nanny when Momma told me this. At first I was VERY excited. I miss Grandma and Grandpa sooo much. It was so awesome to live so close to them, and I want them to be close to us again. Moving away from them was VERY difficult. Then Momma said something that really upset me. She said, "And now that they'll be out of Ogallala we can finally bring that chapter of our lives to a close. We really don't have any good reason to go back there as often as we do now." I was so upset, and then I said something very stupid and rude, I even tried to convince myself not to say it. So as tears and sobs were emitting, I practically yelled, "That's easy for you to say, you didn't have to leave the most amazing friends you have ever had behind." I regretted saying that the instant it came out of my mouth. I felt terrible. Those words tasted like vinegar as they came out of my mouth. I vented to her for the next half hour about how I feel like I am loosing my best friends. I only get to see them once every couple of months or so. Out of sight out of mind. It happens. This isn't the first time I've moved away from friends. Although, this is the first time that I have maintained contact and closeness with a group of friends post-moving. Last week I was able to spend a few days with some of them at All State Choir Camp at UNK. At the first meal I turned to Syd and said, "I've forgotten what it's like to be with all of you guys for more than a couple of hours at a time." It's true. I always feel a little out of the loop, a little like an outsider. And maybe it's because I am an outsider. I don't know. My family is ready to move on and forget that our little Ogallala Adventure even happened. I don't think I'm ready for that yet. Yes, it ended badly, yes it put us in a lot of struggles, yes it was a definite test of faith, but God had us move out there for a reason. I truly believe it. I don't know what's going to happen, I don't know when I will see my friends again. Mom says we will be making a lot of trips on the weekends out to help Grandma and Grandpa pack and to get the tractor and to clean out our last storage unit, but starting labor day weekend I have either a softball tournament or a marching competition on every weekend until State Marching Competition (which is October 26th), so I don't even know if I will get to go along. I knew this transition would happen eventually, but I didn't think it would happen so soon. It's amazing to me how I can plan things out in my head as to the way I want them to go, but God comes along and does His will. That's my pray and plea, that His will will be done through this entire situation, that I would have faith and turn my worries over to Him. As for right now, I will pursue my walk by faith.

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

"Therefore Comma"

When I was going into sixth grade, our school bought a new type of reading curriculum. Each of us had to go through a series of tests to see where we would be placed. They had three different levels for each grade, and some of the levels overlapped with grades above us and below us. My sixth grade class was split into three different reading groups. My tests went very well... except for one... Reading Out-loud. My score was terrible on this. For some reason, when I would read out-loud, I would mess up so many words. I would glance ahead to see what happens next, and then I would loose my place and get frustrated, this frustration would cause me to switch words around, drop them out, or add completely new words. As my frustration increased, it became more and more difficult for me to read. It was very embarrassing. I would always get called on to read because I was a "nerdy smart person", and I would always be so embarrassed that I couldn't read eloquently like the rest of the nerds. My teachers could never understand it. I was proficient in all other places except for this. If I was reading in my head, I could read books that were two or three years above my "level" and my scores on those tests were nearly perfect. But because of my inability to read out-loud fluently, I was put in the lowest level in my grade. In fact, when I was in sixth grade and Rudy was in fourth grade, we were taking the same reading class. He was ahead, and I was behind. It really frustrated me because if you were in the lowest level reading class, you had to stay in that level for Language Arts and Spelling as well. I hated sitting through those classes. It is so frustrating when you know the answer by heart and someone else doesn't get it at all so the teacher has to keep revisiting the subject. (If you have been around me enough, you know that I cannot say the words "therefore or however" without saying the word "comma" after it. This is because in my language class people would forget to write the comma, so when we were speaking out-loud my teacher would make us say the word "comma". Unfortunately, that stuck with me, and I can't seem to break that habit. It's not necessarily a bad habit, it is just annoying to other people.) I was so frustrated. The summer between sixth and seventh grade, I decided that I was not going to be in that lower level class, so I worked really hard on reading out-loud. I read everything out-loud: signs, books, magazines, the TV, anything and everything. (This is also another habit that I formed.) I had a lot of down time that summer after my four wheeler wreck that ended in a broken arm, so I would go to the library every other day to get new books. When we went to take the tests the first week of school my seventh grade year, I passed out of the lowest level! I was so happy. I still to this day, cringe a little when I am asked to read out-loud, I still don't feel as if I can read eloquently, but it is WAY better than it was when I was in elementary school. It's amazing what you can do when you put your mind to it.

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

House/Job Relocation Update

About a month ago while I was at High School Camp in Missouri, my Momma got a call from a new hospital in Kearney. They had somehow heard about how she had set up the entire pharmacy under a director position for the Syracuse Hospital, and they wanted her to do the same for their new hospital. So that Thursday Momma called me and the first thing out of her mouth was, "What do you think about moving to Kearney?" I started crying. I didn't want to move again. That would have been my 3rd high school, and my 4th new school. She went to the interview the week after, and they offered her the job and more than what my parents make combined for a salary. So they started looking into options. If we were going to move to Kearney, Dad would have to stay with the Omaha Fire Department for five more years until he can retire. (Technically he "retired" from the department when we moved to Ogallala, but that is a long and confusing story.) So if we were to move to Kearney, Dad would have to get an apartment in Omaha, and stay in Omaha for one week and then in Kearney for another week. This really upset me. I hate when Dad's not around, we don't function properly without the entire family. I didn't want to go to a huge Kearney school, so Mom and I started looking into Private Schools in the area. Kearney Catholic was the only one we could find. We didn't even talk to Dad about that one... the answer would have been something like "Over my dead body." So Kearney Public it was... I looked into it, they don't even have a softball team! I was angry. I would have had to quit Dance Team and Student Council here in Syracuse, and I would have to leave my wonderful church. I really struggled with having faith during this whole situation. There were so many nights of crying myself to sleep. I didn't read my bible at all during that whole week. Finally one night I broke down completely I was so ashamed that I wasn't having faith and that I wasn't in the Word. I prayed and read like crazy the next two weeks. After Mom and Dad got back from Minnesota (they went to go pick up our new camper), they called a family meeting. (I was scared. The last time we had a family meeting was the night that the City Council decided to "eliminate the fire chief position". It was the night that Dad told us that there was a very slim chance that we would stay in Ogallala.) Anyway... Dad announced that they had decided that we were not going to move to Kearney. He said that it would put Mom in too much of a "family leader role", and that he didn't want to put any of us into a situation where our family wasn't being held together in a biblical way. They also announced that we received an offer on our house. However, the sale was contingent on the buyers selling their house. So we are waiting for that to happen! We have finally found a house that would work for our family. The main problem with this house is that it is in town. We are NOT town people. We are loud and obnoxious. There is a reason that we live way out in the country with our acreage surrounded by a thick tree line. This house is in the town of Unadilla, which is just five miles west of Syracuse. It is closer to church, closer to school, and closer to Omaha for Dad. So we are just waiting on the sale of our buyer's house.Through this whole thing I have learned that I need to make sure that I am turning all of my worries over to the Lord, and putting my complete faith in Him. I also need to make sure that I stay in the Word when things like this come up. Thankfully, I have wonderful people in my life who encourage me to do these things on a daily basis. I am very thankful for those amazing people.